The Argentinian Pampas

The Pampas of Argentina are inhabited by a limited number of indigenous animals. Among the birds are rheas and a series of smaller birds, including the popular ovenbird (Furnarius rufus), the name of which comes from its globe-shaped nest made of mud. Endemic mammals include the mara (Dolichotis patagona), a long-legged, long-eared rodent; the plains viscacha (Lagostomus), a burrowing rodent related to the chinchilla; the guanaco (Lama guanacoe), a South American mammal related to the camel but resembling a deer; and Pampas deer (Blastoceros campestris). The restricted number of the larger herbivorous mammals is quite remarkable and illustrates the scarcity of recent mammalian types in the Neotropical region.

The southern Chilean forests

The forests of southern Chile are inhabited by a specialized animal life, with a high percentage of endemic species. Parakeets and hummingbirds are found as far south as Tierra del Fuego. A marsupial, the rincolesta of Chiloé (Rhyncholestes raphanurus), is one of the most primitive mammals still in existence.

The high Andes have an impoverished animal life. Species there have had to adapt to the harsh and cold environment, scanty vegetation, and low oxygen pressure. The great number of lakes in the region has attracted many aquatic birds, including flamingos, which nest up to elevations of 16,000 feet (4,900 metres) in northern Chile, and amphibians such as the giant toads of Lake Titicaca, which spend their entire life in water. Mammals are represented by the guanaco and vicuña (both wild ruminants related to the domesticated llama), deer, and numerous rodents, including viscachas, chinchillas, and guinea pigs. Predatory species include foxes, pumas, the spectacled bear (the only bear species in South America), and many birds of prey, notable among which is the Andean condor (Vultur gryphus), the giant of living birds, with a wingspan of more than 10 feet (3 metres).

Andean condorAndean condors (Vultur gryphus).Galen Rowell/Corbis

The arid west coast

The limited variety of animals that inhabit the arid coast of Peru and northern Chile is especially striking when compared with the richness of offshore marine life. The cold upwelling water of the Peru Current, rich in salts, are swarming with life, from plankton to fishes, including the Peruvian anchovy (Engraulis ringens); those small forms of life provide food for higher levels of the marine community, represented, for example, by sea lions and birds, many of which are endemic to the area. Birdlife includes a penguin, many species of gulls and terns, shearwaters, petrels, cormorants, pelicans, and boobies (a kind of gannet). Three kinds of those birds—the guanay (or Peruvian cormorant; Phalacrocorax bougainvillii), the variegated booby (Sula variegata), and the brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis)—nest by the millions on small islands off the coast, where their droppings accumulate to form guano, a highly prized fertilizer.

Overhunting and habitat destruction have seriously depleted populations of wild animals in much of South America. Almost all wild species are less abundant than they were before the mid-20th century, and some are threatened with extinction. Laws designed to protect wildlife frequently are not observed. In addition, many rural people, especially in tropical-forest areas, still depend on game as a source of food; and the sale of live animals for pets or laboratory use has further depleted stocks. Populations of animals not considered economically valuable have been reduced as their forest habitats have been removed.

Nature reserves, established to protect animals in their habitat, are now found in most South American countries. Argentina pioneered wildlife protection on the continent by creating Nahuel Huapí National Park. At Iguaçu (Iguazú) Falls—located on the Iguaçu River on the border between Brazil and Argentina, just before the confluence of the Iguaçu and Paraná rivers—two national parks, one in each country, protect wildlife and the surrounding rainforest. Manu National Park in southeastern Peru protects one of the richest collections of plant and animal life in the Amazon basin, including more than 1,000 species of birds. Venezuela’s effort to protect habitats led to the establishment (1962) of Canaima National Park in the Guiana Highlands, which with an area of nearly 11,600 square miles is the largest park on the continent. Overall, South America has about 58,000 square miles of parks, but the inviolability of many of those sanctuaries against the pressures of economic development has not been clearly established in all countries.

Manu National Park, Peru: reptile and amphibian biodiversityA discussion of the high level of reptile and amphibian biodiversity around Manu National Park, southern Peru.Displayed by permission of The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.

The people

Ethnic origins and migrations

Four main components have contributed to the present-day population of South America—American Indians (Amerindians), who were the pre-Columbian inhabitants; Iberians (Spanish and Portuguese who conquered and dominated the continent until the beginning of the 19th century); Africans, imported as slaves by the colonizers; and, finally, postindependence immigrants from overseas, mostly Italy and Germany but also Lebanon, South Asia, and Japan.

Before the beginning of the epoch of European exploration and conquest in the early 16th century, South America was almost completely occupied by diverse peoples. Nearly all of those cultural groups practiced agriculture, and most exhibited an extraordinary understanding of their physical environment that had been developed over thousands of years. Although areas such as deserts, mountain peaks, and tropical rainforests appeared to be uninhabited, most of those places were occupied at least occasionally. The societies with the greatest complexity of social organization and densest population tended to be located along the Pacific Ocean coast, in the adjacentAndes Mountains, and along the major rivers of the Amazon River basin. Less complex societies were located away from the rivers and mountains, and nomadic hunting tribes were sparse in the Pampas, Patagonia, and southern Chile.

Agriculture-based village culture and social organization came first to the tropical lowlands of the Amazon basin and valleys of coastal Ecuador and Colombia (c. 3000 bce). That culture included religious temple-mound complexes, fine ceramics (based partly on earlier technology for making fire-engraved containers out of bottle gourds), and farming such crops as cassava (manioc) and corn (maize) on periodically flooded plains and levees. Those areas eventually became organized into complex chiefdoms containing dense populations, supported in some cases by raised fields—broad planting surfaces separated by ditches that enhanced the fertility of the soil while limiting the possibility of fungal diseases and waterlogging.

The practice of agriculture spread to the desert coast of Peru and Chile and then into the higher elevations of the Andes, and new farming technologies appeared. In coastal areas, elaborate irrigation networks supported ceremonial centres and (later) true cities such as Chan Chan (near present-day Trujillo on the northern coast of Peru), the capital of the Chimú state. Coastal Peruvian and Ecuadorian cultures (such as Moche and Nazca) produced superb ceramic art and finely woven textiles. In coastal Chile the Mapuche (Araucanian) culture effectively occupied its region through farming and hunting.

Nazca painted-clay double-spouted water jar, 1st–2nd century ce.Courtesy of the American Museum of Natural History, New York

In the highlands, fertile soils of volcanic ash were cultivated with the digging stick and a type of foot plow called the chaquitaclla. Highland soils also were improved by constructing long earthen irrigation canals or (in the Central Andes) some of the world’s most elaborate and beautiful stone-walled terracing. In most parts of the Andes, areas of high population density were organized into chiefdoms—such as the Chibcha of Colombia and the mound (tola) builders of Ecuador—led by powerful, paramount lords. Early cities and empires first developed around Huari (Wari) in south-central Peru and Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) in western Bolivia, but the last and best-known empire was that of the Inca (Inka). Called Tawantinsuyu, the Inca state expanded from its homeland in the Cuzco Valley of south-central Peru north to what is now southern Colombia and south to the Maule River in central Chile (the northern limit of the Mapuche culture). The Inca easily conquered the desert coastal cultures by threatening their water supplies but never succeeded with the chiefdoms of the Amazon basin and of coastal Ecuador. Thus, when Inca expansion was halted by the Spanish in the 1530s, the empire was long but narrow, confined to the Andes and the Pacific coast. That empire did not include other advanced agricultural cultures of the continent, because those cultures migrated to Colombia, Venezuela, east into the Amazon basin, and south into the Mapuche area.

Certain areas of South America—notably in the more remote parts of the interior, away from the main rivers—were occupied by simpler village cultures based on shifting cultivation, an agricultural practice still used in many of those areas. Nomadic hunter tribes were located in areas of present-day Uruguay and Argentina and in the extreme south (Tierra del Fuego and Cape Horn). Although those cultures appeared to be simple in organization and technology, they were well adapted to hunting wild animals (e.g., the guanaco), fishing, and gathering edible plants and shellfish in a harsh environment.

The number of Indians at the time of the conquest is uncertain: estimates vary from 8 to 100 million for North, South, and Central America combined (for the Inca, from 3 to 32 million). More recent estimates that put South America’s preconquest population at about 20 million seem more realistic.

Equally controversial is the origin of South America’s Indians. Most anthropologists believe that they are descended from people who migrated to North America from Asia at least 16,500 years ago and possibly earlier, having crossed the Bering Strait separating northeastern Asia and northwestern North America. It is not known when humans first arrived in South America, although it is fairly certain that people were present in Chile by 11,000 bce.